Wet weather is expected to continue for several days across South Florida.

A broad area of low pressure and stormy weather extends from the northwestern Caribbean to the South Florida peninsula. Conditions for development into a tropical depression or potentially a tropical storm are favorable for the next couple of days but become less favorable early next week because of upper-level winds, the hurricane center said in its Saturday 8 a.m. update.

The system has a 20 percent chance of developing during the next two days and the next five days, forecasters said.

No matter what happens though, this part of the region will be in for a stretch of wet weather.

“Nevertheless, locally heavy rainfall will likely continue over portions of western Cuba, the Florida Keys, and the Florida peninsula during the next several days while the system moves slowly northward and then westward near northern Florida and the northeastern Gulf of Mexico,” forecaster Lixion Avila wrote in Saturday’s tropical weather advisory.

The next system that earns a name will be called Nate.

The other system being monitored by the hurricane center is far from Florida in the northeastern Caribbean and is being given no chance of developing over the next two days and now has no chance of developing over the next five days, down from a 20 percent chance on Friday.

Sunday’s forecast from the National Weather Service calls for temperatures in the upper 80’s to mid-90’s and chances of rain ranging from 40 to 60 percent throughout the region.